Evolutionary grade

Cladogram (family tree) of a biological group. The green box may represent an evolutionary grade, a group united by anatomical and physiological traits rather than phylogeny. The red and blue boxes are clades (i.e., complete monophyletic subtrees). Also, the blue and green boxes together are one clade.

An evolutionary grade is a group of species at the same level of organisation.[1][2]

It refers to a group of animals or plants which are very similar, but which are not a clade. They have a similar morphological or physiological complexity, and they are often adapted to the same way of life.

An evolutionary grade is a group of species united by similarities. These similarities led to their being given a name. But now to be a clade, the whole group from the first known member to the present day must be included.

However, we now know that amphibia gave rise to early egg-laying amniotes. These gave rise to sauropsids (the ancestors of reptiles and birds) and synapsids (the ancestors of mammals. 'Reptile' is just a common term for those sauropsids which survived to the present day, minus the birds. As an everyday word, everyone understands it. But as a modern scientific term, it is no longer good, and is less used.

Paraphyletic and polyphyletic taxa often represent evolutionary grades. In some cases paraphyletic taxa are united simply by not being part of any other groups, and give rise to so-called wastebasket taxa.

Bryophyta, mosses in the wide sense, are the physiologically primitive land plants

Bryophytes were long considered a natural group, defined as those land plants which lacked vascular systems. Molecular evidence shows that the bryophytes are not monophyletic since mosses, liverworts and hornworts are in fact separate lineages, with mosses closest to vascular plants.[8] However, the three clades have a similar degree of complexity, and the "bryophyte grade" is a useful benchmark when analysing early plants – it gives information about the status of fossils which cannot always be classified into living groups.[9]